20
Sep

Cheatsheets and More Resources

The Jackol’s Den has an htaccess cheat sheet that you may want to print and add to your resources. You can learn more about other ways the .htaccess file is used in the article Server Move. The .htaccess file can be used to prevent hotlinking as discussed in class yesterday.

Speaking of cheat sheets, Code by Matt, has cheat sheets for Photoshop, Illustrator, CSS, PHP, Dreamweaver, htacess, and more.

Great article at 43 folders on Writing sensible email messages. 43 folders is a personal productivity blog by Merlin Mann with a lot of excellent tips!

Typesetter - oh I love this new typeface comparison tool! You can select three typefaces, sizes, colors, etc., and they will display on the screen so that you can select the best font for your web pages. Be sure to bookmark this valuable resource!

Essential List and Resources on Firefox Extensions from Lifehacker. These extensions would fall into the category of personal productivity rather than web developer. I use many of these extensions and they’re great!

The Opera web browser is now free. That’s $$$ free and ad free!

Microsoft is now offering the Internet Explorer Developer Toolbar (beta) - Here is info on the toolbar from the Microsoft site:

Overview
The IE Developer Toolbar provides several features for deeply exploring and understanding Web pages.

  1. Explore and modify the document object model (DOM) of a web page.
  2. Locate and select specific elements on a web page through a variety of techniques.
  3. Selectively disable Internet Explorer settings.
  4. View HTML object class names, ID’s, and details such as link paths, tab index values, and access keys.
  5. Outline tables, table cells, images, or selected tags.
  6. Validate HTML, CSS, WAI, and RSS web feed links.
  7. Display image dimensions, file sizes, path information, and alternate (ALT) text.
  8. Immediately resize the browser window to 800×600 or a custom size.
  9. Selectively clear the browser cache and saved cookies. Choose from all objects or those associated with a given domain.
  10. Choose direct links to W3C specification references, the Internet Explorer team weblog (blog), and other resources.
  11. Display a fully featured design ruler to help accurately align objects on your pages.

We will install and check this new toolbar out in class this afternoon.

Please don’t forget to vote in the Macromedia vs. Adobe poll that’s running in the forum.

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